“I am very excited that Milius is coming to DESRON 15,” said Capt. Jonathan Duffy, commander, DESRON 15. “The ship’s advanced capabilities will be vital in support of our missions in the Indo-Pacific region.”

During the past year, while homeported in San Diego, Milius was fitted with the Aegis Baseline 9 combat system, upgrading its air defense, ballistic missile defense, surface warfare and undersea warfare capabilities. The ship then completed Combat System Ship’s Qualification trials and multiple live-fire events to perform operational testing of its new weapons technology.

“I could not be prouder of this crew and their hard work and dedication leading up to this deployment,” said Cmdr. Jennifer Pontius, the commanding officer of Milius. “The crew has trained extremely hard to get the ship fully certified and ready for tasking, and we are excited to operate forward and bring new capabilities to the FDNF team.”

With its Aegis BMD system, Milius has the ability to provide regional, as well as homeland, defense support and can intercept short to intermediate-range, separating and non-separating ballistic missile threats above the atmosphere and shorter-range ballistic missiles within the atmosphere.

A U.S. Navy destroyer is a multi-mission ship that can operate independently or as part of a larger group of ships at sea. Milius is equipped with a Vertical Launching System, Tomahawk Cruise Missiles, torpedoes, guns and Phalanx Close-In Weapons Systems.

Upon arrival to Commander, Fleet Activities Yokosuka, Japan, the ship is scheduled to undergo a regular maintenance period while the crew and their families settle into the area.

Milius follows the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers USS Benfold (DDG 65) and USS Barry (DDG 52) as the final destroyer to transition from U.S. 3rd Fleet to U.S. 7th Fleet as part of the U.S. Navy’s strategic laydown and dispersal plan to rotate newer and more capable units into positions to maintain presence and coverage across the Indo-Pacific region to provide security and stability to the forward deployed Navy.